Two more cracking reviews for The Jump

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After hitting three ‘best book’ lists of 2015, The Jump has started 2016 in fine fettle, picking up a couple of cracking blog reviews. First up, Nigel Bird rates it highly over on Sea Minor: ‘Johnstone pulls no punches in his delivery.’

Then, from the other side of the world, Aussie blog Reactions to Reading has a good old rave about it: ‘The Jump is not the kind of book you should start when you only have a few reading minutes at hand. Once begun you’ll want need to finish it quickly.’

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News Round-Up

Posting the other day about my next book coming out made me realise I have a bunch of other news to catch y’all up on, so here it all is below:

1. SALES!
There’s no easy way to talk about books selling well without sounding like a bragging moron, but I’m going to do it anyway. I just learned that I have sold over 300,000 books across all seven novels. Amazingly, two thirds of those sales are for GONE AGAIN, which just seems to keep on keeping on. HIT & RUN is also no slouch at 75,000 and counting. Believe me, no one is more surprised by this turn of events than me. Not complaining, likes!

2. I’M INVADING AMERICA!
Not quite. But my UK publisher Faber & Faber are moving into the American market, and are publishing two of my novels, GONE AGAIN and THE JUMP, in paperback in the US later this year. I’ll also be attending the Bouchercon crime writing convention for the first time, in glorious New Orleans in September. Can’t wait!

3. THE JUMP IN PAPERBACK!
My most recent novel, THE JUMP, is being published in a lovely new paperback edition with a new cover on May 5th. Look out for it.

4. BOOK FESTIVALS!
I’m going to be at various festivals around the place this year, but annoyingly none of the line-ups have been announced yet, so I can’t tell you exactly where and when. More soon.

5. TENTH ANNIVERSARY OF TOMBSTONING!
August this year is the tenth annivesary of my debut novel, TOMBSTONING, hitting the shelves. I will mostly be celebrating by raising a wee dram and shaking my head wondering where the time has gone. Join me in wondering about the passing of the years!

6. ROYAL LITERARY FUND!
I’m still RLF Fellow at Queen Margaret University and loving it. I’m also taking part in the RLF’s Bridge project, giving academic writing workshops in schools, and training to be an RLF Consultant Fellow, which will involve doing the same in universities.

7. NEW MUSIC!
I have a ton of new songs accumulated, and plan to record a new EP or album this year if I can find the time. Which I will. Honest.

8. TUTORING AT MONIACK MHOR!
I’m doing two stints up at Moniack in the Scottish Highlands this year, tutoring creative writing to aspiring writers. February and November. It’s a beautiful place run by amazing people, so if you’re looking for a writing retreat I can heartily recommend it.

9. MANUSCRIPT ASSESSMENT FOR THE LITERARY CONSULTANCY!
Not strictly news as such, but I’ve been assessing manuscripts for The Literary Consultancy for a few years now and I can definitely recommend them as a great service for aspiring writers. Just a wee plug!

10. EGGHEADS!
I recently took part in an episode of Eggheads with fellow crime writers Val McDermid, Mark Billingham, Chris Brookmyre and Martyn Waites. It was tremendous fun. I can’t tell you the outcome, but it’s due to be aired sometime in September apparently.

That’ll do for now, eh?

Cheers, Doug

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CRASH LAND – New Book News!

I am absolutely delighted to announce that my eighth novel, CRASH LAND, will be published by Faber & Faber in November this year. I won’t say much more about it now, except that it’s set in Orkney, and starts with an incident on a plane. As you might expect with one of my books, things go wrong. Very wrong.

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Anyway, very excited! There will no doubt be more chat about the book and hopefully a cover to show you soon.

Cheers, Dx

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My review of Amy Liptrot’s The Outrun in Indy on Sunday

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I absolutely loved this book. A great mix of nature writing and memoir, a first book from an amazing writer. Check it out. Here’s my review in the Indy on Sunday.

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Books to look out for in 2016

Here’s a thing I wrote for The Big Issue about books to look forward to in 2016. I picked books by Amy Liptrot, Helen FitzGerald, Jenni Fagan, Megan Abbott and Hollie McNish. I also wrote about a Tim Winton memoir, but that seems to have got lost. Ho hum.

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My favourite book of 2015

Before Christmas, WH Smith asked me about my favourite book of the year. Here it is on their website. I picked Kent Haruf’s Our Souls At Night (Picador).

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The Jump on Euro Crime’s Books of the Year

Another wee bit of cheery news – The Jump made it on to Amanda Gillies’s books of the year over at Euro Crime, at number two with a bullet! Thanks Amanda!

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The Jump on Raven Crime Reads Books of the Year

I’m absolutely chuffed that my darling wee suicide book, THE JUMP, has made it to number four in Raven Crime Reads’ top five books of the year. Thanks Raven!

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My Top Ten Books of the Year

our-souls-at-night-9781447299356.jpgI made two major discoveries as a reader this year. The first was Kent Haruf. My editor at Faber has been telling me for ages that I needed to read his books, and I finally got round to it. Wow. I read Plainsong, then immediately bought the next two books in that trilogy, then I read his latest and last book, Our Souls at Night (Picador), which is just astonishing. It’s hard to describe the emotional power Haruf manages to create from such simple prose and story. The book is about two elderly neighbours in a small American town, a widow and a widower, who get together at night to sleep together, not for sex but just for companionship, someone to talk to, friendship, simple human contact. They tell each other about their lives, they build a tentative relationship with all the usual complications that entails, and the whole thing is utterly beautiful, truthful and sometimes heartbreaking. An absolute revelation.

410yBDxG2TL._SY344_BO1,204,203,200_.jpgMy second discovery this year was the work of Adrian Tomine. I knew him as an illustrator, and I had his book of New York Drawings, but his graphic novel Killing and Dying (Faber & Faber) completely blew me away. It’s like a collection of the finest short stories, like Raymond Carver or Alice Munroe, illustrated in deadpan, stripped-back style, detailing the little heartbreaks and tiny victories of Gen X strugglers. Just a stunning piece of work. I went straight out and bought his backlist, and loved it all.

 
A-Hand-Reached-Down-to-Guide-Me.jpg41CKwFWGMCL._SX324_BO1,204,203,200_Not a new discovery as such, but I was delighted to see one of my favourite writers get some well-deserved recognition. Jernigan (Serpent’s Tail) by David Gates is a classic novel, and got a much-welcome reissue, while his new collection of stories, A Hand Reached Down to Guide Me, demonstrated a slightly more reflective nature, but was equally assured and bleakly funny.

Unknown.jpegAnother real eye-opener for me was Women Crime Writers of the 40s & 50s (Library of America), edited by Sarah Weinman. To my shame, I had only previously read one of the eight authors, but I was glad I put that right, because the writing here is razor-sharp, psychologically insightful and utterly gripping. Cracking stuff.

51LwayOx09L._SX323_BO1,204,203,200_.jpgThis year I was one of the judges for the Gordon Burn Prize which involved reading a lot of books, fiction and non-fiction, that reflected Gordon’s attitude to writing. There was some great stuff in there, but two stood out for me. The eventual winner was In Plain Sight (Quercus) by Dan Davies, his extraordinary biography of Jimmy Savile. The amount of work Davies put into it, the amount of research, interviews, and his own personal experience, was mindboggling. A terrifying read, a genuinely important book, and a deserved winner. T71774O9nrjL.jpghe book that ran it a close second for me was Peter Pomerantsev‘s Nothing is True and Everything is Possible (Faber & Faber). A startling and shocking piece of reportage from Putin’s Russia, it revealed the unbelievable levels of corruption, manipulation and general fucked-upness. Again, the author threw himself into it, and the end result is a coruscating read.

51HP9ZCVWoL._SX336_BO1,204,203,200_.jpgBack to fiction, with Don Winslow‘s remarkable The Cartel (William Heinemann). It was a sequel to The Power of the Dog, which I hadn’t read, but everyone told me to read it first and I did, back to back with the new one, which amounted to 1,000 pages of violent madness surrounding the Mexican drug cartels. A monumental achievement, the equal of James Ellroy’s writing on Los Angeles, and definitely not a tourist advert for visiting Mexico anytime soon. Brilliant writing.

51xhf1bAusL._SX323_BO1,204,203,200_.jpgAnd finally, two cracking psychological thrillers. First, The Kind Worth Killing (Faber & Faber) by Peter Swanson. A smart, sassy thriller influenced by Patricia Highsmith’s Strangers on a Train, it was deliciously evil,  perfectly plotted and super-sharp. 41gwpS7p31L._SX323_BO1,204,203,200_.jpgEqually as impressive was The Exit (Faber & Faber) by Helen FitzGerald, a typically brilliant tale of dementia, abuse and grief set in a care home for the elderly. Unusual and difficult subject matter, but absolutely gripping all the same.

 

 

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My review of Gillian Flynn’s The Grownup in The Independent on Sunday

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Here’s my review of The Grownup by Gillian Flynn. Not much more than a short story masquerading as a novella, but engaging and well crafted nonetheless.

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